The Bombay Durpun
Type | British India |
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The Bombay Durpun, commonly known as Bombay Durpun, Durpun or Darpan, was a
History
It was established in January 1832. Initially, the newspaper was published fortnightly, but later it was made weekly. At that time, this issue was published in both Marathi and English. The newspaper used to have two columns, one in English and one in Marathi. The column used to be written and printed in Marathi so that the Marathi people could understand what was happening in the country. So that the British could understand what was written in the newspaper, the second column was written in English. Despite the constant attention of the British power, the newspaper Darpan ran for eight and a half years. Its last issue was published in July 1840.[4]
As the concept of a newspaper was not rooted in the common people then, Darpan did not get a large number of subscribers initially.[5]
The Bombay Durpun was published for eight years in educating and enlightening the public, at the end, the newspaper was converted into the United Service Gazette and Literary Chronicle. While announcing the change, the proprietors thanked their supporters and said with pride that the Durpun had not lost a single friend during its career. However, later Jambhekar launched Dig Durshun, a monthly Marathi magazine.[2]
The copies of The Bombay Durpun have been preserved by the Maharashtra State Archives (archival agency of the Government of Maharashtra) in Mumbai.[6]
See also
- List of Marathi-language newspapers
- Media of India
- History of journalism
References
- ^ Ranganathan, Murali (August 28, 2020). "How an Anglo-Gujarati newspaper kept publishing through the Bombay plague and into the 1980s". Scroll.in.
- ^ ISBN 9788123026381.
- ^ "Maharashtra celebrates Marathi Journalism day". News On AIR. January 6, 2021.
- ^ Dhage, Prajwal (January 6, 2022). "पत्रकार दिन : कोण आहेत बाळशास्त्री जांभेकर ज्यांनी महाराष्ट्राला पहिलं वृत्तपत्र दिलं ? जाणून घ्या 'दर्पण' वृत्तपत्राचे वैशिष्ट्य" (in Marathi). TV9 Marathi.
- ^ "'दर्पण'कार बाळशास्त्री जांभेकर" (in Marathi). Mahanagar.
- ^ Patel, Dinyar (March 22, 2012). "India's Archives: How Did Things Get This Bad?". The New York Times.